Volkswagen and other carmakers used to prosper by sending outdated factory
equipment to China to produce older models no longer salable in the West.
But competition has become so fierce here that Honda is about to introduce
its latest version of the Civic only several months after it went on sale in
Europe, Japan and the United States. Toyota, meanwhile, is assembling its Prius
gasoline-electric sedan only in Japan and China.
When Ford Motor opened its first production line here in western China just
three years ago, it used a layout copied from a Ford factory in the Philippines
to produce 20,000 sedans a year based on a small-car design taken from Ford
operations in India.
But this winter, Ford opened a second production line next door that is
practically identical to one of its most advanced factories, the Saarlouis
operation in southwestern Germany. The new line produces the Focus, the same
small car it builds in Germany but different from the Focus sold in the United
States.
But Chinese managers here are not satisfied. "I want to learn from Germany
and then improve on it," Li Jianping, the factory's vice director of
manufacturing, said.
Ford's success in rapidly expanding the scale and sophistication of its
Chongqing operations illustrates how quickly the overall auto industry is
expanding and modernizing in China.
One requirement for a country to become an automobile exporter is to develop
a highly competitive domestic market that demands excellent quality and
efficiency, and China has managed to create just such a market.
American and European carmakers, including Ford, General Motors,
DaimlerChrysler and Volkswagen, as well as Toyota, Honda and Nissan of Japan are
introducing their best technology to their plants in China, and not only to
compete against one another. They also face rapidly growing competition in the
Chinese market from purely local companies like Geely, Chery and Lifan.
The multinationals "really have to bring their latest models," said Yale
Zhang, an analyst in the Shanghai office of CSM Worldwide, an auto-consulting
company based in the Detroit suburbs. "Even average consumers understand if this
is not the latest model."
Multinational joint ventures in China produced a total of 2.3 million family
vehicles last year.
In the race to be No .1 in China, the world's fastest-growing car market,
multinationals from the United States, Japan and Europe are falling over one
another to share their latest designs, technology and manufacturing expertise
with Chinese partners. But industry experts say the sharing has helped China
prepare to become a major car exporter within four years, increasing the
pressure on GM, Ford and other industry giants, which are already losing sales
and market share to foreign rivals.
Few auto executives now doubt that the successful Chinese companies that
emerge from the free-for-all in their home country will be ready to tackle world
markets. "I've seen the Chinese vehicles in China from various, various brands,
and I've said it's a threat that will come to the U.S., I think, by the end of
the decade," said Thomas LaSorda, Chrysler's chief executive.
All of the multinationals expanding in China say their main goal is serving
the Chinese market and not in making cars to export. Still, Honda is already
exporting small cars from China to Europe.
Until the past few years, China's main advantages in the global auto
manufacturing market were in its cheap labor and its talent for copying older
Western designs, often while avoiding licensing fees, a practice that cut
research and development costs to almost nothing.
Wages of less than $200 a month remain a big advantage for China, but it is
developing another advantage. Domestic and foreign automakers are starting with
clean slates to build new operations, using efficient approaches and advanced
management methods.
GM and its local partner, Shanghai Automotive Industry, built an extensive
vehicle design and engineering studio in Shanghai that has just finished a
redesign of the Buick LaCrosse for the Chinese market.
Raymond Bierzynski, president of the development center, said companies must
bring their best technology here if they are to build and sell the advanced
models needed to compete in China. He acknowledged that this "provides a
training ground for local talents in auto design and engineering for future
sustainable development of China's automotive industry."
In the central city of Wuhan, Honda has just finished quadrupling the
capacity of its joint-venture factory with the Dongfeng Motor Group, to 120,000
cars a year. It is also starting to build the Civic there.
Toyota on Dec. 15 began assembling Prius hybrids in the northern city of
Changchun. The world's multinationals had long been leery of transferring
proprietary technology to make hybrid gasoline-electric engines in China, for
fear that it would be copied. While Toyota is still cautious, China is
nonetheless the only place besides Japan where Toyota is assembling the Prius,
arguably its most important car in a decade.